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New
on Carbon Brief
•
Analysis: UK sales of electric
vehicles just overtook petrol
cars for the first time
•
Livestock heat deaths in
transit doubled in UK
record-hot summer of 2025
•
Guest post: How US
renewable-energy growth
persists despite federal
policy uncertainty
•
China Briefing: Five-year
plans passed |
Critical-mineral tensions |
Industrial decarbonisation
plan
News
•
European heatwave is worst
ever and impossible without
climate crisis, scientists say
| Guardian
•
French court orders
TotalEnergies to account for
indirect emissions of end
users | Le Monde
•
UK: June heat record smashed
again as temperature hits
36.7C | Times
•
Brutal nights and humidity
mark Europe’s record June
temperatures | Financial
Times
•
UK's biggest union backs Ed
Miliband for chancellor | Financial
Times
•
China: NDRC, NEA releases 15th
five-year plan for building a
‘new-type energy system’ | BJX
News
Comment
•
Heatwave Britain must do more
to prepare for this scorching
new normal | Editorial,
Independent
•
UK: Andy Burnham's Ed Miliband
test | Robert Shrimsely,
Financial Times
Research
•
New research on marine “carbon
pumps” under future emissions,
“climate-smart agriculture” in
Ethiopia and how German
politicians “underestimate”
public support for climate
action
Other
stories
•
Spectacular electric car sales
weaken pressure for lower CO2
standards, EU climate chief
says | Reuters
•
Eleven countries demand
three-year delay to EU's
landmark methane rules | E&E
News
•
EU warns Turkey over
'unacceptable' snub of Cyprus
in climate summit preparations
| Reuters
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Ho
Woo Nam and Simon Evans
More
new electric vehicles have
been sold over a 12-month
period than petrol cars,
according to Carbon Brief
analysis.
Orla
Dwyer
Twice
as many animals died due to
heat stress en route to
slaughterhouses during the
UK’s record-hot sumJmer in
2025 compared to 2024,
according to Carbon Brief
analysis.
Dhruv
Modi, Alicia Zhao, Tyler
Stotlan and Prof Nate Hultma
Experts
looked at recent trends in the
US energy landscape, focusing
on rising electricity demand,
new electricity capacity
additions and generation, as
well as fossil-fuel production
and state-level case studies.
Anika
Patel, Carbon Brief
The
online version of Carbon
Brief’s fortnightly China
Briefing email newsletter. Sign up for
free.
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Damian
Carrington, The Guardian
On
its frontpage,
the Guardian reports that
scientists say the heatwave in
western Europe is the “most
severe and widespread ever”
and is “only possible due to
the climate crisis driven by
fossil fuel burning”. This is
according to new analysis from
the World Weather Attribution
service, the article explains,
which finds: “As recently as
2003, a heatwave like the
current one in Europe would
have been 2C cooler due to the
lower level of global heating
at the time. In 1976, another
famous heatwave year, it would
have been 3.5C cooler.” The
newspaper adds that the
scientists have also found
that “almost half of Europe’s
850 largest cities” are also
enduring their “worst-ever
heat stress”, from a
combination of temperature and
humidity. CNN reports
that the scientists said that
the heat would have been
“virtually impossible” just a
few decades ago and that
human-caused climate change is
“unequivocally to blame”. The
Associated
Press, Bloomberg,
New York Times,
Politico
and Reuters
also cover the analysis. [See
below for more on the heatwave
and its impact.]
Le
Monde
A
French court has ordered oil
and gas giant TotalEnergies to
account for the emissions from
the use of its products by
clients, reports Le Monde. The
case, brought by climate NGOs
and the city of Paris, “fell
short” of imposing measures
demanded by the plaintiffs,
including a halt in new fossil
fuel projects and cuts in oil
and gas production, it
continues. Reuters
explains that TotalEnergies
has been ordered to “disclose
the climate risks” linked to
its products and “set about
plans to mitigate them”. It
continues that the case is a
“partial victory” for
“climate-change NGOs” seeking
to apply France's 2017
corporate duty of vigilance
law to climate change. The Guardian
reports that the court
determined the company’s
vigilance plan was
“incomplete” and gave it six
months to amend it to include
emissions from end users. The
Associated
Press, Bloomberg,
Climate Home
News, Euractiv
and Financial Times
all have the story.
MORE
ON LITIGATION
-
Datacentres
are facing an increase in
climate-related legal
cases around the world,
according to an analysis
from the London School of
Economics covered by the Guardian.
-
Reuters
reports that California
has sought a court order
to block the federal
government’s reversal of
state vehicle emission
rules.
-
Utility Dive:
“California to sue Trump
administration over
offshore wind buybacks.”
Peter
Chappell and Tash Mosheim,
The Times
The
UK had its “hottest June day”
– again – on Thursday when
temperatures of 36.7C were
recorded in Somerset, reports
the Times. It says the new
record for the month “beat the
high set on Wednesday”, as
well as a record set in 1976.
It continues that on
Wednesday, the UK experienced
its warmest June night on
record, with temperatures in
Cardiff not falling below
23.5C, exceeding the previous
record of 22.7C set in 1976.
The BBC News
notes on its live blog that,
yesterday, England “broke its
record twice in one day”,
Wales recorded its hottest
June day and Scotland and
Northern Ireland both recorded
their hottest day of the year
so far. The i newspaper
covers the heat record on its
frontpage,
where it notes that more than
1,200 schools are shut.
Meanwhile,
BBC News
reports that the London
Ambulance Service (LAS) saw
its “highest ever” number of
life-threatening emergencies.
Crews responded to a record
642 “category one” calls on
Wednesday before the record
was broken again yesterday, it
says. The Independent quotes
LAS chief executive Jason
Killens as saying the record
had been “driven by the
extreme heat”. The Guardian
looks at how the extreme heat
is affecting hospitals in
England, noting that doctors
have pointed to “radiotherapy
machines and MRI scanners
failing, critical IT systems
stalling and cooling units
that serve entire hospitals
breaking down”. The hot
weather has also prompted a
“surge in admissions and
people arriving at A&E,
causing severe overcrowding in
some places”, it continues,
adding that several NHS trusts
have “declared critical
incidents”.
MORE
ON UK HEAT
-
The
heatwave has been linked
to wildfires in the Peak
District by the Daily Mail
and in a frontpage
picture story in the
Times, as well as a
“grassland blaze” in
Worcestershire, according
to BBC News.
-
The
Times:
“Restaurants close, cut
menus and turn off fryers
to beat heatwave.”
-
In
a frontpage
story, the Daily Telegraph
says farmers are
“scrambling to salvage
this year’s pea harvest”
as the heatwave puts
“extreme pressure” on
crops.
-
The
Metro covers London mayor
Sadiq Khan’s proposals for
preparing London for
extreme heat on its frontpage.
-
The
Independent
rounds up demands from
scientists, MPs and
“infrastructure experts”
that the government take
action to upgrade
buildings and transport
links in the face of
rising temperatures.
-
With
“several gas-fired power
plants” and four of the
UK’s 10 nuclear reactors
“switched off for summer
maintenance”, the UK paid
“17 times more” to import
energy from Europe for an
hour on Wednesday evening,
says the Daily Telegraph.
Kenza
Bryan and Steven Bernard,
Financial Times
The
Financial Times reports on how
the heatwave is unfolding
across Europe. It notes that
temperatures neared 41C in
Paris, where “heat-absorbing
zinc rooftops” have caused
temperatures in apartment
buildings to “soar further”.
Some areas of France have seen
night-time temperatures of
30C, it continues, adding that
“tropical nights” that do not
fall below 20C make it harder
for the human body to recover
from heat stress. France’s
prime minister Sébastien
Lecornu reportedly told mayors
yesterday that financing would
“double” for building work on
hospitals including protecting
them from extreme heat,
according to the newspaper. It
notes that the “heatwave is
moving east across Europe” and
is expected to peak in Germany
at the weekend at 41C, adding
that Austria’s weather agency
has warned Vienna could hit a
record 40C.
Meanwhile,
Euronews
reports that France's
state-owned energy giant EDF
has temporarily shut down two
nuclear reactors as a
precautionary environmental
measure, as the country
grapples with a
record-breaking heatwave that
has “already turned deadly”. Le Monde
notes the country is “on
track” towards a “severe
summer drought”. Politico
says the heatwave has “thrust
climate change to the
forefront of the national
debate ahead of next year’s
presidential election” and is
forcing the far-right National
Rally party to “confront its
previous efforts to downplay
the issue”.
MORE
ON EUROPE HEAT
-
In
a frontpage
story, the Financial Times
reports that electricity
prices are soaring across
Europe amid the heatwave.
-
Reuters
reports on how the
European heatwave is
driving an
air-conditioning sales
boom for Asian
manufacturers.
-
Euractiv:
“Record heat tests
Europe's healthcare
systems.”
-
The
Netherlands has issued its
first ever “code red” for
extreme heat, according to
Dutch News,
while Reuters
reports on “concerns” over
milk and meat production
in Belgium.
-
The
Press
Association:
“Weather warnings for
whole island of Ireland as
new record temperature
possible.”
-
The
European Green Party has
called for an emergency EU
leaders summit over
extreme heat, says Politico.
Jim
Pickard, Financial Times
The
head of the UK’s biggest trade
union, Unison, has “endorsed”
energy secretary Ed Miliband
to be the next chancellor,
reports the Financial Times,
opening up a “split with at
least two other major unions”
that are “strongly opposed”.
Miliband is currently a
“frontrunner for the role” in
a potential Andy Burnham
government, alongside former
health secretary Wes Streeting
and current home secretary
Shabana Mahmood, it says. The
newspaper continues that “some
colleagues [within Labour]
have misgivings about
Miliband’s leftwing views and
rapid pursuit of net-zero as
energy secretary, with both
the GMB and Unite concerned
about job losses in the North
Sea from his policies”. The Independent
notes that “at the heart of
the dispute” is Miliband’s
“push towards net-zero and
what unions argue is the risk
to the jobs of workers,
particularly in the North
Sea”. Sky News
reports that current
chancellor Rachel Reeves has
backed Miliband. The Times has a
feature entitled: “Inside the
battle to stop Ed Miliband
becoming chancellor”.
MORE
ON UK POLITICS
-
In
an interview with the Guardian,
Green party leader Zach
Polanski urged Burnham not
to backslide on climate
action, noting that a
failure to be bold on
climate will “see our
country get poorer and his
party slip further into
obscurity”.
-
The
Daily Telegraph
and Daily Express
falsely claim Miliband
“derailed a plan to fund
Britain’s rearmament by
ramping up North Sea
drilling”. [The Department
of Energy Security and Net
Zero said on social media
that the “story is pure
nonsense”, adding that
“the Telegraph was
repeatedly told these
claims are categorically
untrue, yet published it
anyway”.]
-
The
Daily Telegraph
says that Burnham’s team
is “reviewing plans to
increase the rate of
capital gains tax to fund
the removal of all green
levies from energy bills”.
-
Sunderland
City Council, which was
taken over by Reform UK in
May, repealed a 2019
climate declaration on
Wednesday, according to BBC News.
-
Reuters:
“EU says talks over
linking EU and UK
emissions trading systems
impacted by UK politics.”
BJX
News
China’s
top economic planner, the National
Development and Reform
Commission (NDRC), and
the National Energy
Administration (NEA)
have released the country’s
15th five-year plan for
building a “new-type energy
system”, reports industry news
outlet BJX News. The plan sets
a range of targets by 2030,
including aiming for clean
energy to account for 30% of
power generation and making
wind and solar the “mainstay”
of China’s power mix,
according to finance news
outlet Cailianshe.
The outlet also notes targets
of installing 300 gigawatts
(GW) of new energy storage
capacity and 110GW of nuclear
power capacity, as well as
ensuring the power grid is
capable of absorbing 900GW of
distributed renewable energy.
The plan also calls for the
“strengthening” of coal’s role
as a “bottom-line guarantee”,
promoting the development of
“key upstream mineral
resources for the renewable
energy supply chain” and
developing hydrogen energy and
“green fuels”, adds the
outlet. Reuters
also covers the story, saying
China will encourage the
direct connection of green
power to datacentres.
MORE
ON CHINA
-
BJX News
reports China’s total
installed power generation
capacity reached 4,010GW
last month, with the share
of coal capacity falling
to 32%, while non-fossil
energy capacity rose to
62%.
-
The
South China
Morning Post reports
that China’s “green
energy” could cost as
little as 0.3 yuan
(US$0.04) per KWh within
five years.
-
Zimbabwe
says it is considering
using its “significant
mineral resources”,
including lithium, to
“fund road and railway
construction projects with
China”, reports Reuters.
-
A
Chinese expert said
BloombergNEF’s prediction
of China’s emissions
reduction and share of
coal in the power mix was
“overly optimistic” and
“even radical”, according
to China Daily.
-
China
issued an action plan for
“public participation” in
building a “Beautiful China”,
calling for social
adoption of “green and
low-carbon lifestyles”,
reports the Paper.
-
Economic Daily
says that offshore wind
power sits at the
intersection of China’s
energy transition, marine
economy, and high-end
manufacturing.
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Editorial,
The Independent
In
an editorial, the Independent
argues that climate change in
the UK must be treated with
“the urgency the moment
demands”. It says “there is an
all too obvious need to
increase resilience” in the
UK, from “railway tracks to
the foundations of buildings
and flood defences”. It notes
that, a few years ago, “this
position was common ground”.
But now, it says, Conservative
leader Kemi Badenoch calls
herself a “net-zero sceptic”
and there has been a
“fracturing of the
international consensus by an
anti-science elite”. It
continues: “Under the pressure
of the cost-of-living crisis,
strained public finances, and
the frankly malign influence
of the fossil-fuel lobby on
British politics, the public
and politicians alike have
found more immediate,
quotidian matters to fret
about. This approach is
perfectly understandable, but
deeply flawed. Climate change,
with its costly consequences
for every nation and every
human being, is an
inconvenient truth, and an
issue that should transcend
all others.” Even if it is
“practically impossible to
reverse climate change, we can
still limit it”, the newspaper
stresses, noting that
“imaginative solutions will
need to be found”.
MORE
HEATWAVE COMMENT
-
In
the Guardian,
architect Harry Paticas
looks at why hot spells
turn UK schools into “heat
traps”.
-
In
the Daily Mail,
climate-sceptic columnist
Richard Littlejohn argues
that “climate cultists”
want to make the country
“hotter and poorer”.
-
In
a full-page commentary,
the Daily Mail’s
TV critic Christopher
Stevens argues that,
during heat in 1957,
people “just rolled up
their trouser-legs and had
an ice-cream”, continuing
that “such insouciance is
frowned on now”.
-
In
the Evening
Standard, theatre
critic Nick Curtis argues
the current heatwave is
“nothing” compared to the
1976 heatwave.
[Scientists’ had said the
current heatwave in
western Europe is the
“most severe and
widespread ever”].
Robert
Shrimsely, Financial Times
The
Financial Times chief
political commentator Robert
Shrimsley says Andy Burnham’s
choice of chancellor “will
reveal the likely character of
the government and the extent
of any new radicalism”. He
says Miliband “terrifies many
who see him as a high-spending
climate ideologue”. However,
he continues that Miliband’s
critics “don’t dispute that he
is up to the job”, noting that
the energy secretary is the
“most effective and strategic
of Keir Starmer’s ministers”
and “boasts significant
Treasury experience and
chaired Gordon Brown’s council
of economic advisers”. But his
effectiveness is what “worries
opponents”, according to
Shrimsley, who notes that
people fear “he would
overpower Burnham and become
the effective head of
government”. He concludes:
“Burnham’s choice will help
answer a key question. Is this
a radical government, fuelled
by a decentralising
sensibility, ready to go big
on a high-risk heterodox green
growth strategy?”
In
UK newspaper editorials, the Times says
Miliband “represents the
greatest prospective threat to
stability” of the candidates
for chancellor. It continues:
‘While his net-zero zeal and
more radical spending agenda
might endear him to elements
of the Labour left, it is
unlikely to do the same to
jittery bond markets.”
Meanwhile, the Financial Times
says Burnham must “must be
prepared to make unpopular
choices”. Among these will be
a decision on whether to
approve further activities in
the North Sea “to support
production and jobs in the oil
and gas sector, at the risk of
upsetting green activists”, it
says. The Sun
rails against the “hysterical
nanny state” telling the
public not to go outside in
the case of “imminent death”.
In
other Miliband commentary, Daily Telegraph
assistant editor Jeremy Warner
says the energy secretary
would be a ”very high risk
appointment". Also in the Daily Telegraph,
Conservative MP Tom Tugendhat
says “Britain can’t afford Ed
Miliband”.
MORE
UK COMMENT:
-
Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard, world
economy editor at the Daily Telegraph,
writes that Burnham has
the “gift of economic
timing”, in part because
“the UK energy crisis of
the past four years is
essentially over” and the
“UK is over the hump in
the switch to more
efficient electrotech”.
-
Matthew
Lynn, the Daily Telegraph’s
finance columnist, writes
that “Britain’s obsessive
drive to net-zero is
placing intolerable
strains on the grid”.
-
Also
in the climate-sceptic Daily Telegraph,
senior feature writer Rosa
Silverman says that
“critics of the
government” claim that
“current policy actively
discourages the
installation and use” of
air conditioning.
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Kate
Abnett and Bart H Meijer,
Reuters
Ben
Munster, E&E News
Kate
Abnett and Tuvan Gumrukcu,
Reuters
Jess
Shankleman and Natasha
Voase, Bloomberg
Marc
Jones, Reuters
Editorial,
The Wall Street Journal
Marianne
Gros, E&E News
Jennifer
A Dlouhy and Elizabeth
Elkin, Bloomberg
Jeff
Berardelli, The Hill
Che
Pan and Eduardo Baptista,
Reuters
Marie
Mannes and David Shepardson,
Reuters
Guy
Johnson, Bloomberg
Ben
Munster, Politico
Nikolaus
J. Kurmayer, Euractiv
Al
Jazeera
Chelsea
Harvey, E&E News
Anwesha
Pattanaik, Energy Monitor
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